The Pete Alonso Conundrum
- Frayed Knot
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
A bit premature, and still a small sample size, but perhaps a candidate for the 2025 (and beyond) NYM 1st baseman:
2024 June + July stats (not including tonight):
Pete Alonso: .242/.320/.445 in 128/147 ABs/PAs
Mark Vientos: .270/.320/.513 in 115/125 ABs
oe: Age difference = 5 years [25 & 30 this December]. Payroll difference = ?????, but a whole lot!!
At the very least it's something to keep an eye on for the remainder of the season.
2024 June + July stats (not including tonight):
Pete Alonso: .242/.320/.445 in 128/147 ABs/PAs
Mark Vientos: .270/.320/.513 in 115/125 ABs
oe: Age difference = 5 years [25 & 30 this December]. Payroll difference = ?????, but a whole lot!!
At the very least it's something to keep an eye on for the remainder of the season.
Last edited by Frayed Knot on Wed Jul 10, 2024 8:29 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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- batmagadanleadoff
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
Mark Vientios is now a beast and the Mets scariest hitter. Hope his awesomeness lasts and it's not a fluke.
- batmagadanleadoff
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
Also, small sample size, like you said, but Alonso was never as good as Vientos is this year, not even in 2019. And 2019 was the year of the juiciest juice ball in the history of mankind while this year is closer to 1968, the year of the pitcher. Vientos is absolutely killing it this year.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Wed Jul 10, 2024 8:24 pm Mark Vientios is now a beast and the Mets scariest hitter. Hope his awesomeness lasts and it's not a fluke.
- Lefty Specialist
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
I've thought about that too. Pete's going to want an awfully long contract, and Stearns may not want to give it to him.Frayed Knot wrote: ↑Wed Jul 10, 2024 8:19 pm A bit premature, and still a small sample size, but perhaps a candidate for the 2025 (and beyond) NYM 1st baseman:
2024 June + July stats (not including tonight):
Pete Alonso: .242/.320/.445 in 128/147 ABs/PAs
Mark Vientos: .270/.320/.513 in 115/125 ABs
oe: Age difference = 5 years [25 & 30 this December]. Payroll difference = ?????, but a whole lot!!
At the very least it's something to keep an eye on for the remainder of the season.
Even duct tape can't fix stupid. But it can sure muffle the sound.
- batmagadanleadoff
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
I've been thinking about that for weeks now.Lefty Specialist wrote: ↑Wed Jul 10, 2024 8:33 pmI've thought about that too. Pete's going to want an awfully long contract, and Stearns may not want to give it to him.Frayed Knot wrote: ↑Wed Jul 10, 2024 8:19 pm A bit premature, and still a small sample size, but perhaps a candidate for the 2025 (and beyond) NYM 1st baseman:
2024 June + July stats (not including tonight):
Pete Alonso: .242/.320/.445 in 128/147 ABs/PAs
Mark Vientos: .270/.320/.513 in 115/125 ABs
oe: Age difference = 5 years [25 & 30 this December]. Payroll difference = ?????, but a whole lot!!
At the very least it's something to keep an eye on for the remainder of the season.
- Benjamin Grimm
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
I think Spotrac, whoever that is, is way off, unless perhaps those numbers were calculated prior to the 2024 season. I would be very surprised if he got anything close to that.Abbey Mastracco, N.Y. Daily News wrote:The Mets and Alonso’s agent, Scott Boras, have not yet been able to agree on Alonso’s value. Boras has said he’s open to listening to what the Mets have to offer, but he likes to take his clients to free agency to gauge their markets. Spotrac estimates his market value to be worth $32.9 per year, putting him in the realm of an eight-year, $263 million contract.
Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
I don't even know who Abbey Mastracco is. I don't get the NY papers any more because we get the early editions up here. The sports news they have is usually two days old. My local paper at least has most of last night's box scores.
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- Centerfield
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
If Mark can play 3B he should stay there. Moving him to 1B takes away from his value.
I’m not saying we have to resign Pete. Just that there’s no reason to leave defensive talent on the shelf.
I’m not saying we have to resign Pete. Just that there’s no reason to leave defensive talent on the shelf.
- CitiFieldPornRoom
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
I didn't even know they made papers anymore.
Lot of baseball left. How you finish colors perceptions a lot. There's always the pillow contract.
- Frayed Knot
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
And even if that $32.9 number is in the ballpark of where his Current value is, that doesn't mean it's a smart idea to simply take that and multiply it by eight for Pete to sign on the bottom line.Benjamin Grimm wrote: ↑Fri Aug 02, 2024 4:04 pmI think Spotrac, whoever that is, is way off, unless perhaps those numbers were calculated prior to the 2024 season. I would be very surprised if he got anything close to that.Abbey Mastracco, N.Y. Daily News wrote:The Mets and Alonso’s agent, Scott Boras, have not yet been able to agree on Alonso’s value. Boras has said he’s open to listening to what the Mets have to offer, but he likes to take his clients to free agency to gauge their markets. Spotrac estimates his market value to be worth $32.9 per year, putting him in the realm of an eight-year, $263 million contract.
My guess is that the Mets will look to go much shorter term. That starts with the one-year Qualifying Offer and from there discuss three to four years.
Boras isn't going to like that but if I'm Stearns/Cohen I'm daring some team to offer Pete five-plus and would be willing to wave bye-bye if one did.
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- Benjamin Grimm
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
I think that's how you have to play it.
- CitiFieldPornRoom
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
The Mets are better with Pete than without.
It's almost impossible to replace that type of power.
The ball is pretty dead this year.
Steve Cohen is 10 billion dollars richer since he bought the Mets.
If winning is a serious goal, there seems to be zero reason to let Alonso get away.
It's almost impossible to replace that type of power.
The ball is pretty dead this year.
Steve Cohen is 10 billion dollars richer since he bought the Mets.
If winning is a serious goal, there seems to be zero reason to let Alonso get away.
- Frayed Knot
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
"The Mets are better with Pete than without" -- Sure. But it's not as simple as merely saying: 'Mets w/Pete in 2025 > Mets w/o Pete in 2025'. It's about how long you have to commit to Pete in order to keep him a NYM in 2025. There is a point -- there's ALWAYS is a point -- at which it's smart to say 'No', either because of dollars or length or both, and walk away.
"It's almost impossible to replace that type of power." -- Until you look across the diamond where we find a guy who's five years younger, under team control thru 2029, is probably 1/20th of the price right now, and has 75% as many HRs this season compared to Pete in 60% of the plate appearances. I'm not saying it's a case of either/or but replacing P.A. with M.V. is an option that wasn't even on the radar when I started this thread some 20 months ago, and it's one that's worth considering.
"The ball is pretty dead this year." -- I have no idea if that's true but, even if so, it's true across the board.
"Steve Cohen is 10 billion dollars richer since he bought the Mets." -- Again, no idea if that's accurate but it's largely irrelevant as far as I'm concerned as to what they do with Pete. I'm not trying to save Uncle Steve money here, I'd just like to see them make the best baseball decision for the team in both short and long term.
"If winning is a serious goal, there seems to be zero reason to let Alonso get away." -- Nobody is irreplaceable. The Braves thrive without both Freddie Freeman and Dansby Swanson. San Diego is near the top without Soto or Blake Snell. The Cards allowed Albert Pujols to walk and went to the playoffs eight times in eleven years (much better than the team who signed him) despite his departure. The Nats won a WS the year after Harper left.
anyway, it's a topic to be revisited in the winter of '24-'25
"It's almost impossible to replace that type of power." -- Until you look across the diamond where we find a guy who's five years younger, under team control thru 2029, is probably 1/20th of the price right now, and has 75% as many HRs this season compared to Pete in 60% of the plate appearances. I'm not saying it's a case of either/or but replacing P.A. with M.V. is an option that wasn't even on the radar when I started this thread some 20 months ago, and it's one that's worth considering.
"The ball is pretty dead this year." -- I have no idea if that's true but, even if so, it's true across the board.
"Steve Cohen is 10 billion dollars richer since he bought the Mets." -- Again, no idea if that's accurate but it's largely irrelevant as far as I'm concerned as to what they do with Pete. I'm not trying to save Uncle Steve money here, I'd just like to see them make the best baseball decision for the team in both short and long term.
"If winning is a serious goal, there seems to be zero reason to let Alonso get away." -- Nobody is irreplaceable. The Braves thrive without both Freddie Freeman and Dansby Swanson. San Diego is near the top without Soto or Blake Snell. The Cards allowed Albert Pujols to walk and went to the playoffs eight times in eleven years (much better than the team who signed him) despite his departure. The Nats won a WS the year after Harper left.
anyway, it's a topic to be revisited in the winter of '24-'25
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
There’s one huge problem with this analysis: the Mets need both players (and have needed both) to be successful this year. If you “replace” Alonso with Vientos, then there’s still a hole in the lineup to be “replaced.”Frayed Knot wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06, 2024 10:42 pm"It's almost impossible to replace that type of power." -- Until you look across the diamond where we find a guy who's five years younger, under team control thru 2029, is probably 1/20th of the price right now, and has 75% as many HRs this season compared to Pete in 60% of the plate appearances. I'm not saying it's a case of either/or but replacing P.A. with M.V. is an option that wasn't even on the radar when I started this thread some 20 months ago, and it's one that's worth considering.
- Frayed Knot
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
There are Always holes in the lineup/rotation/pen that need to be replaced. Every season, every team.
But the biggest mistake GMs make (both actual GMs and us amateur ones) is in thinking that someone is irreplaceable and therefore needs to be kept at all costs.
Stearns et al have a decision to make with Pete at the end of the year and Pete has a say in how that all goes. But if the choice comes down to signing a 30 y/o 1B/DH, whose best statistical season is still his first and the current one arguably his worst, to an expensive and long term deal it then makes sense to consider options that move forward without him. Vientos's emergence and the possibility of moving him across the diamond while replacing him with someone else (Baty?, Acuna?, trade/FA?) provides them with one additional such option that few if any even considered just four months ago.
But the biggest mistake GMs make (both actual GMs and us amateur ones) is in thinking that someone is irreplaceable and therefore needs to be kept at all costs.
Stearns et al have a decision to make with Pete at the end of the year and Pete has a say in how that all goes. But if the choice comes down to signing a 30 y/o 1B/DH, whose best statistical season is still his first and the current one arguably his worst, to an expensive and long term deal it then makes sense to consider options that move forward without him. Vientos's emergence and the possibility of moving him across the diamond while replacing him with someone else (Baty?, Acuna?, trade/FA?) provides them with one additional such option that few if any even considered just four months ago.
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- TheNextMetsManager
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
Letting Alonso go is actually an easy decision
if.
they invest and have a good plan for the future. They have good player dev and fix Alvarez, etc. His power is pretty nearly irreplaceable, and it plays in a pitcher's park. Pete's been doing this for a long time, Vientos doesn't even have a full season, you simply can't just say "oh go play first and do what you're doing." and think that's enough. You need that home run power.
Alonso plays poor defense. He's at 1B. Sure, you could DH him but why lock yourself down there? Plus he doesn't want to.
Mets are 6th in run creation this year, 8th in the second half. Not terrible, but not comfortable in the "we hit well enough so we can focus on other holes" game.
Alonso's 133 wRC+ in the second half is on par with his career norm. That's 48th of 131 qualified hitters even. He's a good hitter.
He's just SO one-dimensional that it does present all sorts of opportunities to replace him.
On the other hand, the solution to replace him offensively is simply a money one. You couple simply refuse to be outbid for Soto.
if.
they invest and have a good plan for the future. They have good player dev and fix Alvarez, etc. His power is pretty nearly irreplaceable, and it plays in a pitcher's park. Pete's been doing this for a long time, Vientos doesn't even have a full season, you simply can't just say "oh go play first and do what you're doing." and think that's enough. You need that home run power.
Alonso plays poor defense. He's at 1B. Sure, you could DH him but why lock yourself down there? Plus he doesn't want to.
Mets are 6th in run creation this year, 8th in the second half. Not terrible, but not comfortable in the "we hit well enough so we can focus on other holes" game.
Alonso's 133 wRC+ in the second half is on par with his career norm. That's 48th of 131 qualified hitters even. He's a good hitter.
He's just SO one-dimensional that it does present all sorts of opportunities to replace him.
On the other hand, the solution to replace him offensively is simply a money one. You couple simply refuse to be outbid for Soto.
Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
This. Or, at the very least, disregard the idea that the league's biggest payroll would have difficulty replacing a 1B/DH type north of 30 who can no longer guarantee you an .800 OPS.TheNextMetsManager wrote: ↑Sat Sep 07, 2024 12:46 pmOn the other hand, the solution to replace him offensively is simply a money one. You couple simply refuse to be outbid for Soto.
Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
They would have to replace him with someone who could consistently drive in runs.
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I have never insulted anyone. I simply describe them, accurately.
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
You don't want to sign aging borderline fat first Basemen to long term contracts
When Pete's belly goes look out
When Pete's belly goes look out
Diabetic Squirrel
Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
Receding hairlines are actually a pretty good indication of excess testosterone, as any casual observation of pro wrestling might indicate.
But yes, it goes without saying that, if the Mets don't sign him this offseason, they should probably find somebody that's pretty good. Whether that means a particular goodness in RBI situations is a narrow definition of that, and it certainly doesn't describe late model Pete Alonso.
But yes, it goes without saying that, if the Mets don't sign him this offseason, they should probably find somebody that's pretty good. Whether that means a particular goodness in RBI situations is a narrow definition of that, and it certainly doesn't describe late model Pete Alonso.
Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
No, it is what I would want if they had to replace him, whether it describes the latest version of Alonso or not.
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"Never underestimate the power of stupid people in a large group". George Carlin
I have never insulted anyone. I simply describe them, accurately.
"I love this shit" - Jesse Winker
I have never insulted anyone. I simply describe them, accurately.
"I love this shit" - Jesse Winker
- Frayed Knot
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
Well then, that all makes this winter quite the conundrum, doesn't it?
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Re: The Pete Alonso Conundrum
Right , i didn't know about his close ties to Queens , first time hearing about it